“Neither of my novels felt as though it were a gift. Writing them made me feel as though I were digging in a quarry with a teaspoon. So the ease with which this came was a terrific surprise. You don't always have to suffer in the name of art! You don't have to cut off your ear!”

"I finished the first draft of SHARK GIRL nearly two years later, just before graduation. And within a few days of finishing this, a girl in Hawaii was attacked by a shark while surfing and lost her right arm."

"Winning Delacorte was like having a dream fall out of nowhere into my lap. I didn't feel like I had earned publication.... I thought I'd have to send out my manuscript to every publishing house on the planet and be rejected by all of them twice before I'd ever have anything published."

"Doing the research was a challenge, but not an unpleasant one. Corresponding with the various scientists was especially rewarding, they were all extremely helpful and generous with their time and knowledge."

"For years, I would pass a sign posted in front of a charming old house that read, 'Beauty Shop for Rent...fully equipped, inquire within.' The rusted corners and the way it started to slant with time intrigued me and I was often tempted to pull up the driveway and find out what the owner was like. Was she old? Longing to retire? When I asked myself what would happen if a young girl was left on her doorstep, I realized the sign wasn't just a curiosity—it was a book!"

“Bike touring is an amazing way to travel, and I wanted to capture that and share it with people who might be unfamiliar with it. And we collected so many anecdotes and incidents that people always asked us to recount for them, that I began to realize if I could string some of those together, it might be a great book for teens.”